What happens to a body—and a career—when an entire industry teaches you to ignore pain, erase individuality, and mold yourself into someone else’s ideal?
What You’ll Hear in This Episode
In this first installment of our three-part series, we trace Amie’s story back to the ballet studio, exploring how early training, discipline, and body expectations shape a person long before they ever enter the fitness industry. You’ll hear about the emotional and physical realities of growing up in ballet — the perfectionism, the injuries, the aesthetic pressure, and the mindset that becomes second nature.
From the foundational roots of professional ballet, we look at how those experiences set the stage for Amie’s eventual transition into Pilates, revealing why so many dancers gravitate toward the method and how their internal narratives often follow them into the studio. This episode lays the foundation for understanding the deeper questions we’ll explore in Episodes 13 and 14, especially around identity, healing, and the search for movement that truly supports the body.
Key Takeaways
Ballet training begins with discipline, conformity, and the expectation to never break—not even when your body does.
The professional dance world has a long history of body shaming, aesthetic pressure, and mental health challenges that still affect dancers today.
Careers hinge on silence: if a dancer reveals injury, they risk losing their role—instantly.
Professional ballet schools operate like pipelines where only a fraction of dancers graduate or advance.
Classical ballet styles (Russian/Vaganova, French, Balanchine, etc.) shape how dancers move, perform, and even look.
Amie’s final performance—dancing on broken bones—became the turning point that pushed her toward Pilates and, eventually, a new identity in the fitness world.
Resources and Mentions
Work with Amie Kane-Lee: https://www.peakmvmt.com/Instagram @PeakMVMTSubstack https://peakmvmt.substack.comLinkedIn www.linkedin.com/in/amie-kane-lee
Work with Melanie Webb: https://webbwell.com/
Cultural Influences:Misty Copeland’s advocacy for body diversity and industry reform